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Organic Chemistry. Chapter 6 - An Overview of Organic Reactions Susan F. Hornbuckle Associate Professor of Chemistry Clayton State University. 6.1 Kinds of Organic Reactions. Addition reactions Elimination reactions Substitution reactions
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Organic Chemistry Chapter 6 - An Overview of Organic Reactions Susan F. Hornbuckle Associate Professor of Chemistry Clayton State University
6.1 Kinds of Organic Reactions • Addition reactions • Elimination reactions • Substitution reactions • Rearrangement reactions (Isomerization reactions)
6.1 Kinds of Organic Reactions • Addition reactions – two molecules combine – The organic reactant starts with pi bond which breaks and forms two sigma bonds. • Elimination reactions – one molecule splits into two – The organic reactant starts with two sigma bonds which break and a pi bond forms.
Kinds of Organic Reactions (Continued) • Substitution – parts from two molecules exchange – “Double Replacement Reaction” – only sigma bonds are breaking and forming.
Kinds of Organic Reactions (Continued) • Rearrangement reactions – a molecule undergoes changes in the way its atoms are connected – “Isomerization Reaction”
6.2 How Organic Reactions Occur: Mechanisms • A mechanism is a complete step-by-step description of exactly which bonds break and which bonds form in what order to give the observed products.
Steps in Mechanisms • We classify the types of steps in a sequence • A step involves either the formation or breaking of a covalent bond • Steps can occur individually or in combination with other steps • When several steps occur at the same time, they are said to be concerted. • If steps are not concerted, they may not be written on the same structure in the mechanism.
Types of Steps in Reaction Mechanisms • Bond formation or breakage can be symmetrical or unsymmetrical • Symmetrical- homolytic • Unsymmetrical- heterolytic
Indicating Steps in Mechanisms • Curved arrows indicate breaking and forming of bonds • Arrowheads with a “half” head (“fish-hook”) indicate homolytic and homogenic steps (called ‘radical processes’) • Arrowheads with a complete head indicate heterolytic and heterogenic steps (called ‘polar processes’)
Arrows (verbs) of Organic Chemistry • chemical or physical process occurs • equilibrium • resonance (averaging) • single electron movement • electron pair movement • multiple processes or retrosynthetic analysis
6.3 Radical Reactions • Not as common as polar reactions • Radicals react to complete electron octet of valence shell • A radical can break a bond in another molecule and abstract a partner with an electron, giving substitution in the original molecule • A radical can add to an alkene to give a new radical, causing an addition reaction
Steps in Radical Substitution • Three types of steps that occur in radical reactions • Initiation – homolytic formation of two reactive species with unpaired electrons (non-radical 2 radicals) • Propagation – reaction with molecule to generate radical • Example - reaction of chlorine atom with methane to give HCl and CH3. (non-radical + radical non-radical + radical)
Steps in Radical Substitution • Termination – combination of two radicals to form a stable product: CH3. + CH3. CH3CH3 (2 radicals non-radical) Radicals are in low concentrations in the reaction mixture, therefore termination steps do not occur as often as propagation steps.
6.4 Polar Reactions • Molecules can contain local unsymmetrical electron distributions (uneven distribution of electrons) due to differences in electronegativities. • This causes a partial negative charge on an atom and a compensating partial positive charge on an adjacent atom. • The more electronegative atom has the greater electron density • Elements such as O, F, N, Cl are more electronegative than carbon
Polarizability • Polarization is a change in electron distribution as a response to change in electronic nature of the surroundings • Polarizability is the tendency to undergo polarization • Polar reactions occur between regions of high electron density and regions of low electron density
Generalized Polar Reactions • An electrophile, an electron-poor species, combines with a nucleophile, an electron-rich species • An electrophile is a Lewis acid • A nucleophile is a Lewis base • The combination is indicated with a curved arrow from nucleophile to electrophile
6.5 An Example of a Polar Reaction: Addition of HBr to Ethylene • HBr adds to the bond. • The bond is electron-rich, allowing it to function as a nucleophile. • H-Br is electron deficient at the H since Br is much more electronegative, making HBr an electrophile
Mechanism of Addition of HBr to Ethylene • HBr electrophile is attacked by electrons of ethylene (nucleophile) to form a carbocation intermediate and bromide ion • Bromide adds to the positive center of the carbocation, which is an electrophile, forming a C-Br bond • The result is that ethylene and HBr combine to form bromoethane • All polar reactions occur by combination of an electron-rich site of a nucleophile and an electron-deficient site of an electrophile
6.6 Using Curved Arrows in Polar Reaction Mechanisms • The arrows track “electron movement” • Electrons always move in pairs • Charges change during the reaction • One curved arrow corresponds to one step in a reaction mechanism
Rules for Using Curved Arrows • The arrow goes from the nucleophilic reaction site to the electrophilic reaction site • The nucleophilic site can be neutral or negatively charged
Rules for Using Curved Arrows (Continued) • The electrophilic site can be neutral or positively charged • The octet rule should be followed
6.7 Describing a Reaction: Equilibria, Rates, and Energy Changes • Reactions may go either forward or backward to reach equilibrium • The multiplied concentrations of the products divided by the multiplied concentrations of the reactant is the equilibrium constant, Keq • Each concentration is raised to the power of its coefficient in the balanced equation.
Magnitudes of Equilibrium Constants • If the value of Keq is greater than 1, this indicates that at equilibrium most of the material is present as products • If Keq is 10, then the concentration of the product is ten times that of the reactant • A value of Keq less than one indicates that at equilibrium most of the material is present as the reactant • If Keq is 0.10, then the concentration of the reactant is ten times that of the product
Free Energy and Equilibrium • The ratio of products to reactants is controlled by their relative Gibbs free energy • This energy is released on the favored side of an equilibrium reaction • The change in Gibbs free energy between products and reacts is written as “DG” • If Keq > 1, energy is released to the surroundings (exergonic reaction) • If Keq < 1, energy is absorbed from the surroundings (endergonic reaction)
Numeric Relationship of Keq and Free Energy Change • The standard free energy change at 1 atm pressure and 298 K is DGº • The relationship between free energy change and an equilibrium constant is: • DGº = - RT ln Keq where • R = 1.987 cal/(K x mol) • T = temperature in Kelvin • ln Keq = natural logarithm of Keq
6.8 Describing a Reaction: Bond Dissociation Energies • Bond dissociation energy (D): amount of energy required to break a given bond to produce two radical fragments when the molecule is in the gas phase at 25˚ C • The energy is mostly determined by the type of bond, independent of the molecule • The C-H bond in methane requires a net energy input of 106 kcal/mol to be broken at 25 ºC. • Table 6.3 lists energies for many bond types • Changes in bonds can be used to calculate net changes in heat
6.9 Describing a Reaction: Energy Diagrams and Transition States • The highest energy point in a reaction step is called the transition state • The energy needed to go from reactant to transition state is the activation energy (DG‡)
First Step in Addition • In the addition of HBr the (conceptual) transition-state structure for the first step • The bond between carbons begins to break • The C–H bond begins to form • The H–Br bond begins to break
6.10 Describing a Reaction: Intermediates • If a reaction occurs in more than one step, it must involve species that are neither the reactant nor the final product • These are called reaction intermediates or simply “intermediates” • Each step has its own free energy of activation • The complete diagram for the reaction shows the free energy changes associated with an intermediate